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    Submission To Authority

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    today. They are taught to receive orders and to follow them without question. But when should submission to authority stop? Should orders be disregarded when they conflict with a person’s own morals and consciousness? Maybe they should‚ but in the Milgram experiment‚ it was found that it is actually very easy for a person to accept and follow orders while leaving out their own judgment. This is exactly what happens in the movie A Few Good Men. This movie shows the discipline that the marines have and

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    The article “If Hitler asked you to electrode a stranger‚ would you? Probably” by Philip Meyer discusses the Milgram experiment that took place in the 1960’s at Yale University. The experiment was designed to test obedience to authorities of higher power and how they can transform and individual to do things they could never do‚ without being pushed past their moral limits. I do believe that people today still value conformity and obedience to authority as they did in Milgram’s time. When people

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    Human Experimentation

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    understanding of the human body. The Little Albert Experiment was performed by John Watson. The experiment was a psychological experiment that was used to acknowledge classical conditioning in humans (Cicarelli and Meyer 11). Cicarelli‚ Meyer‚ and Milgram all believed that certain processes in an experiment would make a subject mentally change. Cicarelli and Meyer add on to this notion by stating “the experiment attempted to show that a child would become afraid of a non-fearful object if accompanied

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    Essay #4 First draft Psychology Grade 11D Discuss ethical considerations related to research studies at the cognitive level of analysis There are plenty of ethical considerations connected to research studies at the SCLOA‚ for example the right to withdraw‚ deception‚ knowledgeable agreement and excessive stress or harm. For example‚ Festinger’s “When Prophecy Fails” observation of a doomsday cult has ethical invasions of deception as well as knowledgeable agreement.  Festinger and

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    research has shown that situational characteristics have dramatic and sometimes disturbing effects on individual behaviour. Stanley Milgram famously demonstrated that people are willing to compromise their personal values - going so far as to inflict life-threatening physical pain on others - when instructed to do so by someone posing as a doctor. Philip Zimbardo‚ in his iconic "Stanford prison experiment"‚ demonstrated that kind‚ law-abiding‚ mentally stable individuals demonstrated sadistic‚ cruel

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    item‚ four point scale with eleven subscales. Tests such as this provide researchers with results that determine how gender roles affect daily lives. A study performed by Stanley Milgram (1974)‚ tested how far an individual would be willing to harm someone else‚ just because they were told to do so. In this case‚ Milgram‚ a man wearing a lab coat provided the instructions to the two different participants. One was Teacher‚ the one being studied; while the other Learner‚ who was involved as part of

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    Miss

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    (1998) criticised Milgram’s research‚ he pointed to a real life study of a group of German policemen during the holocaust who behaved quite differently. Being physically close to their victims didn’t cause them to disobey. Mandel goes on to say that Milgram provided an obedience alibi and in real life people obey for different reasons‚ for example in the case of the holocaust‚ being prejudice against Jews. This questions the real benefits of Milgram’s study as it does not seem to represent real life

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    A Stimulated Prison Study

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    Philip Zimbardo. Interestingly‚ the Office of Naval Research sponsored the study as part of an ongoing programme tailored to generate a better understanding of the first principles of psychological processes underlying human aggression (Haney‚ Banks‚ & Zimbardo‚ 1973). A famous experiment that is widely propagated in the education of social psychology‚ demonstrating the importance of the power of social situations on people’s behaviour regarding conformity‚ obedience and aggression. Zimbardo‚ vastly

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    Conformity And Obedience

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    Conformity and Obedience Starting from a very young age‚ it is considered the norm to obey and to conform. The purpose of this essay is to evaluate a study for conformity and obedience. Conformity can be defined as a change in one self‚ when one gives in to group pressure‚ in order to fit in to society. Obedience on the other hand is when you are told what to do. The difference between the two are‚ when we conform it is usually down to peer pressure. Where as in obedience you are taking orders from

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    Ethics

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    Question One There were many ethical violations that occurred in the Zimbardo Prison Study. The first violation was deception. Although Zimbardo got consent from the participant‚ he did not fully explain what the participant would be going through. They were told that they would be participating in a mock prison study. However‚ they were not told that they would be arrested at their homes and striped searched upon arrival at the prison site. It is very important that you inform participants

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